army of the danube - wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.pdf
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Army of the Danube
Fusilier of a French Revolutionary Army
Active 2 March 11 December 1799
Country First Republic
Engagements Battle of Ostrach
Battle of Stockach (1799)
Battle of Winterthur (1799)
First Battle of Zurich
Second Battle of Zurich
Disbanded 24 November 1799 and units
merged into Army of the Rhine
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Jean-Baptiste Jourdan
Andr Massna
Louis Marie Turreau
Army of the DanubeFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Army of the Danube(French:Arme du Danube)was a field army of the French Directory in the 1799southwestern campaign in the Upper Danube valley. Itwas formed on 2 March 1799 by the simple expedient of
renaming the Army of Observation, which hadbeenobserving Austrian movements on the border betweenFirst French Republic and the Holy Roman Empire. Itwas commanded by General Jean-Baptiste Jourdan, 1stComte Jourdan (17621833).
The formation of the army was part of the FrenchDirectory's long termstrategy to undermine Habsburginfluence in theHoly Roman Empire, and, conversely,to strengthen French hegemony in central Europe after
the wars of the First Coalition and the Treaty of CampoFormio in 1797. Despite the Treaty, Austria and Franceremained suspicious of each other's motives, and the
purpose of the Army of the Observation was to watchfor Austrian border transgressions. Understanding thatthe negotiations at the Congress of Rastatt were goingno-where, the Army of Observation was instructed tocross the Rhine. Once across the Rhine, the Army of theDanube, was to secure strategic positions insouthwestern Germany (present day Baden-
Wrttemberg) and engage Archduke Charles' Austrianarmy. In the meantime, the Army of Helvetia, undercommand of Andre Massena, would secure suchstrategic locations as St. Gotthard pass, the Swiss
plateau, and upper Rhine river basin.
The army participated in four battles. In the battles ofOstrach and first Stockach, the Army of the Danubewithdrew after suffering heavy losses. Afterreorganization, in which elements of the army were
combined with Massena's Army of Switzerland, itwithdrew after an engagement with Charles' superiorforce at Zrich in early June 1799 only in the SecondBattle of Zrich did the Army of the Danube secure anuncontested victory. In December 1799, the Army of theDanube merged with the Army of the Rhine.
Contents
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1 Background
2 Purpose and formation
3 Crossing the Rhine
4 Engagements
4.1 Battle of Ostrach
4.2 Battle of Stockach
4.3 Battle of Winterthur4.4 First Battle of Zrich
4.5 Second Battle of Zrich
5 Organizational and command problems
5.1 School for marshals
6 Subsequent variations
7 Commanders
8 Sources
8.1 Citations and notes
8.2 Bibliography
Background
Initially, such rulers of Europe as Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor viewed the revolution in France as anevent between the French king and his subjects, and not something in which they should interfere. As the
rhetoric grew more strident, the monarchies started to view events with distrust. Leopold, who hadsucceeded Joseph as Emperor in 1791, saw the situation surrounding his sister, Marie Antoinette, and herchildren, with greater and greater alarm. As the revolution grew more and more radical, he still sought toavoid war, but in the late summer, he, in consultation with French migr nobles and Frederick William IIof Prussia, issued the Declaration of Pilnitz, in which they declared the interest of the monarchs of Europeas one with the interests of Louis and his family. They threatened vague, but serious, consequences if
anything should happen to the royal family.[1]
By 1792, the French republican position had become increasingly difficult. Compounding internaleconomic and social problems, French migrs agitated abroad for support of a counter-revolution that
would restore an absolute monarchy. Chief among them were the Prince Cond (cousin of Louis XVI),Cond's son, the Duke de Bourbon, and Cond's grandson, the Duke d'Enghien. From their base in Koblenimmediately over the French border, they sought direct support for military intervention from the royalhouses of Europe, and themselves raised a small army. The ascension of young and uncompromisingFrancis as Holy Roman Emperor-elect on the death of his father in July 1792 also contributed to their
unease.[1]
On 20 April 1792, the French National Convention declared war on Austria. In this War of the FirstCoalition (17921798), France ranged itself against most of the European states sharing land or water
borders with her, plus Portugal and the Ottoman Empire. Although the Coalition forces achieved several
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Once the Army of the Danube crossedthe Rhine at Kehl and Huningen,most of its action centered around theRhine's east-west shores
The French (red) and Austrian (yellow) armiesconverged on Ostrach in March 1799.
ammunition, and training. Jourdan documented assiduously these shortages, pointing out in lengthycorrespondence to the Directory the consequences of an under-manned and under-supplied army his
petitions seemed to have little effect on the Directory, which sent neither significant additional manpower
nor supplies.[5]
Jourdan's orders were to take the army into Germany and securestrategic positions, particularly on the roads through Stockach andSchaffhausen, at the western-most border of Lake Constance.Similarly, as commander of the Army of Helvetia, Andre Massenawould acquire strategic positions in Switzerland, in particular the SGotthard Pass, the passes above Feldkirch, particularly Maienfeld(St. Luciensteig), and hold the central plateau in and around Zrichand Winterthur. These positions would prevent the Allies of theSecond Coalition from moving troops back and forth between thenorthern Italian and German theaters, and insure French access tothese strategic passes. Ultimately, this positioning would allow theFrench to control all western roads leading to and from Vienna.Finally, to complete Vienna's isolation, the army of Mayence woulsweep through the north, blocking further access to and from Viennfrom any of the northern Provinces, or from Britain.[6]
Crossing the Rhine
On March 1, 1799, the Army of Observation, in an order of battle oapproximately 30,000 men in four divisions, crossed the RhineRiver at Kehl and Basel As units crossed, they took the name Army
of the Danube.[7]
Advance Guard, with approximately
9,000 men under General Franois Joseph
Lefebvre, and temporary commanded by
Dominique Vandamme. This also included
the detached left flank of 3,000 Vandamme
eventually took to Stuttgart.[8]
I. Division, with approximately 8,000 men
under General Pierre Marie Barthlemy
Ferino.
II. Division, with approximately 7,000 men
under General Joseph Souham.[9]
III. Division, approximately 7,000 men under Laurent Saint-Cyr constituted the left flank.
Reserve, with approximately 3,000 men under Jean-Joseph Ange d'Hautpoul.[9]
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Battles of the Army of the Danube
The army advanced in four columns. First Division, the right wing, assembled at Hningen, crossed at
Basel] and advanced eastward along the north shore of the Rhine River toward Lake Constance. [10]TheAdvanced Guard crossed at Kehl, and Vandamme led it north-east through the mountains via FreudenstadtThis column eventually became the left flank. It was followed across the Rhine, also at Kehl, by the II.Division. The Third Division and the Reserve also crossed at Kehl, and then divided into two columns, III.Division traveling through the Black Forest via Oberkirch, and the Reserve, with most of the artillery andhorse, further south via the valley at Freiburg im Breisgau, where they would find more forage, and then
over the mountains past the Titisee to Loffingen and Hfingen.[9]
Although Jourdan could have established a position on the immediate eastern slope of the mountainsandindeed he might have been better advised to do sohe pushed eastward across the Danube plain, taking atemporary position between Rottweil and Tuttlingen. Eventually he directed the army to establish a linecentered in Pfullendorf. He planned to engage the Austrian army under the Habsburg commander-in-chief
Archduke Charles on the Ostrach plateau.[11]
While this may have seemed like a good plan, Jourdan's choice of ground created problems for him later.The plain below Pfullendorf was riddled with such streams and brooks as the Ostrach, a Danube tributary,
which drained out of the marshes and swamps of Pfrungenried in the spring of most years, this was not thebest choice of ground. Although from Pfullendorf and the more moderate heights to the north of the villagof Ostrach, Jourdan could establish reasonable artillery positions, the softness of the marshland itself wouldiminish the impact of a cannonade on the Austrian line. The marsh was also prone to fogginess, whichwould hinder visual planning and tactics. Furthermore, the softness of the ground would make the use ofcavalry difficult, and cavalry maneuvers would be made more difficult by the likelihood of fog. Finally, thmajor part of Charles' army had wintered immediately east of the Lech River, which Jourdan knew, becaushe had sent agents into Germany with instructions to identify the location and strength of his enemy. Thiswas less than 64 kilometres (40 mi) distant any passage over the Lech was facilitated by available bridges
both of permanent construction and temporary pontoons and a traverse through friendly territory.[12]
Engagements
In March 1799, the Army of the Danube engaged in two majorbattles, both in the southwestern German theater. At the Battle ofOstrach, 2022 March 1799, the first battle of the War of theSecond Coalition, Austrian forces, under the command of ArchdukCharles, defeated French forces. The French suffered significantlosses and were forced to retreat from the region, taking up new
positions at Messkirch (Mkirch, Mekirch), and then at Stockach
and Engen. At the second battle, in Stockach, on 25 March 1799, thAustrian army achieved a decisive victory over the French forces,and again pushed the French army west. Jourdan instructed hisgenerals to take up positions in the Black Forest, and he himselfestablished a base at Hornberg. From there, General Jourdan
relegated command of the army to his chief of staff, Jean Augustin Ernouf, and traveled to Paris to ask formore and better troops and, ultimately, to request a medical leave. The Army was reorganized, and a
portion placed under the command of Andr Massna and merged with the Army of Helvetia. Followingthe reorganization and change in command, the Army participated in the Battle of Winterthur and the First
Battle of Zrich and, three months later, the Second Battle of Zrich.[13]
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Battle of Ostrach
Date 2023 March 1799
Location Ostrach, Salem Abbey (Germany)
Result French Retreat
Belligerents
First Republic Habsburg Monarch
Commanders and leaders
Jean Baptiste Jourdan Archduke Charles
Strength
18,000 52,000
Casualties and losses
2,257 (12.5%) 2,113 (4%)
Battle of Stockach (1799)
Date 25 March 1799
Location Stockach, present-day Germany
Result Austrian victory and French
withdrawal from region.
Belligerents
First Republic Habsburg Austria
Battle of Ostrach
The Battle of Ostrach, also called theBattle by Ostrach,occurred 2023 March 1799. In early March, the Armyof the Danube pressed forward toward Pfullendorf andOstrach, the former an imperial city in Upper Swabiaand the latter a nearby village of 300 belonging to theImperial Abbey of Salem. Their goal was to cut theAustrian line at Switzerland, preventing the Coalitionuse of Switzerland as an overland route between centraland southern Europe. This would ostensibly isolate thearmies of the Coalition in northern Italy and Germany,and prevent them from assisting one anotherfurthermore, if the French held the interior passes inSwitzerland, they could use the routes to move their
own forces between the two theaters.[14]
The battle occurred during Holy Week in 1799, amidrain and dense fog, on the marsh southeast of thevillage. Initially, on 20 March, the French were able totake, and hold, the village of Ostrach and the nearby hamlet of Hokirch. On the morning of 21 March, asGeneral Jourdan later wrote, as the Austrian army attacked, his men seemed to disappear in a cloud of
redcoats, which referred to the Austrian Hussar and Grenadier uniforms.[15]That evening, after more than15 hours in general engagement, the Austrians flanked his left wing, and Saint Cyr's force was pressed bacto the Pfullendorf heights. In the early morning, as the fog lifted, Jourdan could see the Archduke'sformidable force arrayed on the plains below him. The archduke's arrangements made it clear that Jourdancould not keep the heights of Pfullendorf. As he withdrew, a portion of his right flank was cut off from the
main force.[16]
Although casualties appeared even in numbers for both sides, the Austrians fielded a significantly largerfighting force of nearly 55,000 at Ostrach, with another 60,000 stretched along a line between LakeConstance and Ulm. French casualties amounted to more than 12 percent of their force, and Austrian,approximately four percent. The French were forced back to Stockach, where on 25 March the armies
engaged again, this time with greater losses on both sides, and a decisive Austrian victory. [17]
Battle of Stockach
At the Battle of Stockach, Jean-Baptiste Jourdan andArchduke Charles again directed the French force of40,000 and the Austrian force of 80,000, respectively.While attempting to rally his troops, Jourdan wasdismounted, nearly trampled to death by his soldiers,and barely escaped capture by the Austrians. Charles'
personal intervention was crucial for the Austrians, andhe was in the thick of the fighting, buying time forreinforcements to arrive. The French were defeated and
driven back upon the Rhine River.[20]
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Commanders and leaders
Jean-Baptiste Jourdan Archduke Charles
Strength
40,000 soldiers 80,000 soldiers
Casualties and losses
400 killed, 1600
wounded, 2,000 captured,
1 gun lost.[18]
500 killed, 2400
wounded, 2,900 captured
2 guns lost.[19]
Battle of Winterthur, near Zrich
Switzerland
Date 27 May 1799
Location Winterthur, Switzerland
Result Austrian victory
Belligerents
Habsburg Monarchy First Republic
Commanders and leaders
Friedrich Freiherr von
Hotze
Michel Ney,
Commanding elements o
The general engagement was brutal and bloody. Beforedaybreak on 25 March, the French left wing launched aheadlong attack on the Austrian right wing, coordinatedwith assaults on the Austrian left. The ferocious attackforced the Austrians out of the woods in which they had
been positioned overnight, and pushed them to thevillage of Schwanndorf. Fearing that his forces wouldshortly be flanked, Charles directed reinforcements to
back up the right wing. The Archduke himself led eightbattalions of Hungarian grenadiers into the fight, andduring this part of the action, both the Prince of Anhaltand Karl Aloys zu Frstenberg were killed by French
case shot.[21]The main French assault on the Austrian center was stalled by the superior numbers. [22]
On the French right flank, General Ferino attempted to push the Austrians back, first with a cannonade,followed by an attack through the woods on both sides of the road between the hamlet of Asch andStockach. A third charge succeeded in taking the road, but the Austrian forces reformed the line and theartillery, now at the head of a wedge, bombarded the French troops. In a bayonet charge, the French took
the hamlet of Wahlweiss, but Ferino's troops could not hold it and withdrew during the night. [23]Jourdanthen ordered a general withdrawal from the region, instructing his divisions to retreat along the lines ofmarch they had followed into the region, and himself establishing a command post at Hornberg. He sent th
cavalry to the western side of the Black Forest, where the horses could expect to find better forage.[24]
Battle of Winterthur
By mid-May, 1799, the Austrians had wrested control of the eastern portions of the newly formed HelveticRepublic from the French as the forces of Hotze and pushed them out of the Grisons. Archduke Charles'
own sizable forceabout 110,000 strongcrossed the Rhine west of Schaffhausen, and prepared to joinwith the armies of Friedrich, Baron von Hotze and Friedrich Joseph, Count of Nauendorf on the SwissPlateau by Zrich. The French Army of Switzerland and the Army of the Danube, now both under thecommand of Andre Massna, tried to prevent this merger of the Austrian forces at the Winterthur
crossroads.[25]
Massna sent the newly promoted General of DivisionMichel Ney and part of the Army of the Danube toWinterthur on 27 May 1799 to stop the Austrianadvance from eastern Switzerland. If the Austrians
succeeded in uniting Hotze's army from the east withNauendorf's directly north of Zurich, and ArchdukeCharles' which lay to the north and west, the Frenchwould be half encircled at Zurich and dangerously
exposed.[26]
On the morning of 27 May, Friedrich Freiherr vonHotze assembled his force into three columns andmarched toward Winterthur. Opposite him, Michel Neydeployed his force around the heights, the so-called
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Friedrich Joseph, Count
of Nauendorf
the Army of the Danube
Strength
8,000 7,000
Casualties and losses
1,000 killed, wounded or
missing.
800 men killed, wounded
or missing, four guns.
First Battle of Zrich
Date 47 June 1799
Location Zrich, Switzerland
Result Austrian victory
Belligerents
First Republic Habsburg Monarch
Habsburg Monarchy
Commanders and leaders
Andr Massna Archduke Charles of
AustriaStrength
30,000 40,000
Casualties and losses
1,700 3,500
Ober-Winterthur, a ring of low-lying hills some 6kilometers (4 mi) north of the city. The overallcommander of the forward line, Jean Victor Tharreau,had informed Ney that he would send Jean-de-DieuSoult's division to support him Ney understood this tomean he was to make a stand along the entire outpostline, and that he would not be isolated. His small forcewould receive reinforcements from Soult's division.Consequently, Ney directed the weakest brigade, underthe command of Gazan, to move up a long valleytoward Frauenfeld, and another brigade, under the command of Roget, to take the right, preventing any
Austrian flanking maneuver.[27]
By mid-morning, Hotze's advanced guard had encountered moderate French resistance first from the two
brigades Ney had at his disposal.[28]The Austrian advance troops quickly overran the weaker brigade andtook possession of the woods surrounding the village of Islikon. After securing the villages of GundeschwSchottikon, Wiesendangen, and Stogen, further west of Islikon, Hotze deployed two of his columns facing
the French front, while a third angled to the French right,[27]
as Ney had expected he would.[28]
Soult neveappeared (he was later court martialed for insubordination), and Ney withdrew his forces through
Winterthur, regrouping with Tharreau's main force in the outskirts of Zurich.[29]A day later, Hotze's force
united with the main Austrian force of Archduke Charles.[30]
First Battle of Zrich
In the First Battle of Zrich, on 47 June 1799,approximately 45,000 French and 53,000 Austriansclashed on the plains around the city. On the left wing,
Hotze had 20 battalions of infantry, plus supportartillery, and 27 squadrons of cavalry, in total, 19,000men. On the right wing, General Friedrich Joseph,
Count of Nauendorf commanded another 18,000.[31]
The battle cost both sides dearly General of BrigadeCherin was killed, on the French side, and on theAustrian side,Feldzeugmeister(General of Infantry)Olivier, Count of Wallis, was killed. On the French side,500 died, 800 were wounded and 300 captured on theAustrian side, 730 killed, 1,470 wounded, and 2,200captured. When the Austrians took the French positions
in the city, they also captured over 150 guns.[32]
Ultimately, French general Andr Massna yielded thecity to the Austrians, under Archduke Charles. Massenaretreated beyond the Limmat river, where he managed
to fortify his positions.[33]Hotze's force harassed their
retreat, and secured the river shoreline.[34]Despite Hotze's aggressive harassment of the French retreat,
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Second Battle of Zrich
Date 2526 September 1799
Location Zrich, Switzerland
Result decisive French victory
Belligerents
First Republic Habsburg Monarch
Habsburg Monarchy
Russia
Commanders and leadersAndr Massna Alexander Korsakov
Friedrich von Hotze
Strength
75,000 24,000 Russians
22,000 Austrians
Casualties and losses
Unknown 22,000
Charles did not follow up on the withdrawal Massna established himself on the opposite bank of theLimmat without threat of pursuit from the main body of the Austrian Army, much to the annoyance of the
Russian liaison officer, Alexander Ivanovich, Count Ostermann-Tolstoy.[35]
On 14 August 1799, a Russian force of 6,000 cavalry, 20,00 infantry, and 1,600 Cossacks, under Alexande
Korsakov, joined Archduke Charles' force in Schaffhausen.[36]In a vice-like operation, together with theRussians, they would surround Andr Massna's smaller army on the banks of the Limmat, where it had
taken refuge the previous spring. To divert this attack, General Claude Lecourbe attacked the pontoonbridges over which the Austrians crossed the Rhine, destroying most of them, and making the rest
unusable.[37]
Before Charles could regroup, orders arrived from the Aulic Council, the imperial body in Vienna charged
with conduct of war, to overset his plan[38]Charles' troops were to leave Zurich in the supposedly capablehands of Korsokov, re-cross the Rhine and march north to Mainz. Charles stalled this operation as long ashe could, but eventually he had to concede to Vienna's orders. Consequently, the Russian troops under anovice general replaced the Austrian troops and their seasoned commander in the strategically importantcity. Charles withdrew his force to the north of the Rhine and marched slowly toward Mainz. In Italy, the
Russian generalissimo, Alexander Suvorov, was horrified when he heard this: he depended upon a stableAustro-Russian presence in Switzerland to protect his flank and he expected to join this army by Septembe
or October at the latest.[39]Although the order to Charles to recross the Rhine and march north waseventually countermanded, by the time such instructions reached him, he had gone too far to return to
Zurich in time.[40]
Second Battle of Zrich
In the Second Battle of Zrich, the French regainedcontrol of the city, along with the rest of Switzerland.
Notably, Massena out-generaled Korsakov surroundedhim, tricked him, and then took more than half his armyas a prisoner. Massena also captured the baggage trainand most of Korsakov cannons, and inflicted over 8,000
casualties.[41]Most of the fighting took place on bothbanks of the river Limmat, up to the gates of Zrich, andin part within the city itself. Zrich had declared itselfneutral, and was spared general destruction. GeneralOudinot commanded the French forces on the right bank
and general Joseph Mortier, those on the left.[42]
At the same time, Soult led a small force, some 150musket-men, across the river Linththe men held theirmuskets over their heads and waded across, throughwater to their chestsand protected the crossing site forthe remainder of the force. Baron von Hotze,commander of the Austrian force there, advanced on the
position near Richterswil to direct its defense, and waskilled by a French musket ball. His successor, Franz
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Petrasch, could not push the French back, and organized a retreat from the region, falling back to St. Gallen
and losing another 8,000 men and some guns.[43]By the time Suvorov arrived in St. Gallen in earlyOctober, the Austrians and the Russians had been pushed out and he was forced to lead his men over the
Alps to the Vorarlberg, resulting in additional losses.[44]
Organizational and command problems
The French army experienced a variety of command problems, especially in its early operations insouthwestern Germany. After the defeat at Stockach, the army withdrew into the Black Forest. Jourdanrelinquished command provisionally to Ernouf, who was a capable staff officer but had insufficientexperience to hold together a varied and demoralized force. Jourdan retired to Strasbourg, where he was, oclaimed he was, indisposed. By the time Massena arrived to take command, organization and discipline wain shambles. Only four divisional generals had remained at their posts: Klein, Ferino, Souham, andVandamme. Decaen was under arrest in Strassbourg, pending a Courts-martial, as was d'Hautpoul, for hisfailure to organize a timely cavalry attack at Stockach. The others had disappeared to different parts of thesouthwest or had gone to France. Lecourbe, who was injured, had gone to Paris no one knew whereBernadotte had gone, and Saint Cyr had retired to Mannheim. The latter was at least reachable. Lecourbe,
a strategically astute move, had gone to Paris he remained there until late November, when he was able tooffer Napoleon direct assistance in his coup, and thus acquired Bonaparte's attention and gratitude.[45]
School for marshals
Initially, the Army included five future Marshals of France: Jean-Baptiste Jourdan, its commander-in-chieFranois Joseph Lefebvre, Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr, and douard Adolphe
Casimir Joseph Mortier.[46]After the defeat at Ostrach, the Army was reorganized and command shifted to
another future marshal, Andre Massena.[47]
Subsequent variations
The Army of Switzerland and portions of the Army of the Danube merged in a joint command under AndrMassena in April 1799 in June, portions of the Army of the Danube were used to strengthen the Army ofthe Rhine. Both the Army of the Rhine and the Army of the Danube subsequently merged in 24 November
1799 to form a new, enlarged army designated the Army of the Rhine. [48]
Commanders
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11. ^Blanning, p. 232 Rothenburg, p. 74
12. ^Rothenberg, pp. 7074 Jourdan, pp. 6588 96100 Blanning, p. 232 (German)Ruth Broda. "Schlacht von
Ostrach: jhrt sich zum 210. Mal Feier am Wochenende. Wie ein Dorf zum Kriegsschauplatz wurde. In:
Sdkurier vom 13. Mai 2009.
13. ^John Young, D.D.A History of the Commencement, Progress, and Termination of the Late War between Gre
Britain and France which continued from the first day of February 1793 to the first of October 1801.Edinburg
Turnbull, 1802, vol. 2, pp. 230345 Gallagher, p. 7079 Jourdan, pp. 190204.
14. ^Blanning, p. 232.
15. ^Although the Habsburg Infantry wore white coats, some grenadier and hussar units wore red. Jourdan himself
says that the coats were red, and an English source confirms this. Jourdan, pp. 145145 "Engagements Between
The Grand Armies Of The Archduke and General Jourdan." The Times, Friday, 5 April 1799 pg. 2 col A.
16. ^Sir Archibald Alison.A History of Europe from the Commencement of the French Revolution in 1789 to the
Restauration of the Bourbons,New York: A.S. Barnes, 1850, p. 115 Young, pp. 229231.
17. ^Young, pp. 229231.
18. ^Smith, p. 148.
19. ^Smith, pp. 4950.20. ^Rothenberg, p. 74 Ramsey Weston Phipps, The Armies of the First French Republic, volume 5: The armies
the Rhine in Switzerland, Holland, Italy, Egypt and the coup d'etat of Brumaire, 17971799, Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 1939, pp. 4950.
21. ^Young, pp. 225230.
22. ^Gallagher, p. 79.
23. ^Young, p. 230 Jourdan, pp. 198204.
24. ^Jourdan, p. 204 Young, p. 230.
25. ^Lawrence Shadwell.Mountain warfare illustrated by the campaign of 1799 in Switzerland: being a translatio
of the Swiss narrative, compiled from the works of the Archduke Charles, Jomini, and other... London: Henry SKing, 1875, p. 107.
26. ^Shadwell, p. 108 Smith, Clash at Winterthur. pp. 156157.
27. ^ abShadwell, p. 108.
28. ^ abAtteridge, p. 46.
29. ^Blanning, p. 233 Shadwell, p. 108.
30. ^Smith, Clash at Winterthur. pp. 156157.
31. ^Smith, p. 158.
32. ^Smith reports that the casualty figures are controversial. Smith, p. 158.33. ^(German)Katja Hrlimann, (Johann Konrad) Friedrich von Hotze inHistorisches Lexikon der Schweiz
(http://hls-dhs-dss.ch/index.php). 15 January 2008 edition, accessed 18 October 2009' Blanning, pp. 233234.
34. ^(German)Jens-Florian Ebert. Freiherr von Hotze. Die sterreichischen Generle 17921815
(http://www.napoleon-online.de/AU_Generale). Accessed 15 October 2009 (German)Katja Hrlimann, (Johan
Konrad) Friedrich von Hotze Blanning, pp. 23334.
35. ^Smith, 158.
36. ^Another 40,000 troops, under General Alexander Suvorov, had marched into northern Italy by a different route
Rothenberg, p. 74.
http://hls-dhs-dss.ch/index.phphttp://www.napoleon-online.de/AU_Generalehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antoine_Henri_Jominihttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Suvorovhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archduke_Charles,_Duke_of_Teschen -
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ISBN 0-340-56911-5
(German)Broda, Ruth. "Schlacht von Ostrach:" jhrt sich zum 210. Mal Feier am Wochenende.
Wie ein Dorf zum Kriegsschauplatz wurde. In: Sdkuriervom 13. Mai 2009.
"Engagements Between The Grand Armies Of The Archduke and General Jourdan." The Times
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